So far this month in education news, a California court has decimated rigid job protections for teachers, and Oklahoma's governor has abolished the most rigorous learning standards that state has ever had. Back and forth we go in America's exhausting tug-of-war over schools — local vs. federal control, union vs. management, us vs. them.
But something else is happening, too. Something that hasn't made many headlines but has the potential to finally revolutionize education in ways these nasty feuds never will.
In a handful of statehouses and universities across the country, a few farsighted Americans are finally pursuing what the world's smartest countries have found to be the most efficient education reform ever tried. They are making it harder to become a teacher. Ever so slowly, these legislators and educators are beginning to treat the preparation of teachers the way we treat the training of surgeons and pilots — rendering it dramatically more selective, practical and rigorous.
Over the past two years, according to a report last week from the National Council on Teacher Quality, 33 states have passed meaningful new oversight laws or regulations to elevate teacher education in ways that are much harder for universities to game or ignore. The report, which ranks 836 education colleges, found that only 13 percent made its list of top-ranked programs. But "a number of programs worked hard and at lightning speed" to improve.
This summer, meanwhile, the Council for Accreditation of Educator Preparation is finalizing new standards, which Education Week called "leaner, more specific and more outcomes-focused than any prior set in the 60-year history of national teacher-college accreditation."
Rhode Island, which once had one of the nation's lowest entry bars for teachers, is leading the way. The state has already agreed to require its education colleges to admit classes of students with a mean SAT, ACT or GRE score in the top one-half of the national distribution by 2016. By 2020, the average score must be in the top one-third of the national range, which would put Rhode Island in line with education superpowers like Finland and Singapore.
Unlike the brawls we've been having over charter schools and testing, these changes go to the heart of our problem — an undertrained educator force that lacks the respect and skills it needs to do a very hard 21st-century job. (In one large survey, nearly two in three teachers reported that schools of education do not prepare teachers for the realities of the classroom.)
To understand why this movement matters so much, it helps to talk to a future teacher who has experienced life with — and without — this reform. Sonja Stenfors, 23, is a teacher-in-training from Finland, one of the world's most effective and fair education systems.